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Dale Vince: Our founder鈥檚 story

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By Megan Cherry
13 Dec 2021

Dale Vince OBE is the founder of Ecotricity and a United Nations Climate Champion. Born in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, in 1961, he left school at 15 with no qualifications and spent the next decade living on the road in a variety of unusual vehicles.

In the late eighties he began to visit Glastonbury, picking up work towing broken down vehicles. He came up with the idea of setting up a pitch, Windphones, selling phone calls to the festival goers. He thought mobile phones would be perfect for the job but they needed charging 鈥� so he decided to use a windmill.

He built that first system using an old electricity pylon, a 1kW machine from the USA and some old train batteries from a scrapyard in Stroud. Windphones was a great success at Glastonbury for several years and really captured the imagination of the festival crowd.

Dale Windphone Tower
Dreaming big

In 1991, Dale was parked on a hill near Stroud, using a small windmill to power his everyday life. He was thinking a lot about climate change and believed the single biggest cause in Britain was the way electricity was made. Renewable energy needed to become mainstream.

As he looked down at the lights from the homes and buildings below him, he had an epiphany 鈥� he could spend another ten years living a low-impact life himself, or he could drop back in and try to build a big windmill on the hill.

That didn鈥檛 happen overnight. There was a lot of research and lot of work to do, to turn the idea into reality. In 1995, he was on the verge of building that first windmill when a major problem reared its head 鈥� getting a fair price for the electricity he was going to be generating.

Dale small windmill

Taking on the monopolies

Having been laughed out of the offices of one of the big energy companies of the day 鈥� Who on earth would want renewable energy? 鈥� Dale set about creating his own energy company based on a pioneering local supply model. Dale called it Embedded Supply and it meant using the local grid to match local customers to local generation, something that had never been done before.

Ecotricity was born, and we delivered green electricity generated using local landfill gas to our first customer on 1 April 1996. In the background, Dale was also at work building our first windmill. Its arms started turning in December of the same year 鈥� in a field near Stroud 鈥� and it鈥檚 been generating power ever since.

As the 20th century drew to a close, Ecotricity was firing on all cylinders, securing big business contracts with customers like Thames Water, the Millennium Dome and The Body Shop 鈥� despite the fact Dale was still only employing 15 people!

It was a time of green enlightenment for many and Sainsbury鈥檚 was the first supermarket to embrace renewable power in Britain 鈥� we built the company its own on-site turbine at its distribution centre in Glasgow. This Merchant Wind Power deal was followed by a partnership with Ford; Ecotricity have been powering the production of all Ford diesel cars and vans for nearly 20 years now.

2003 was a bit of a milestone year 鈥� we started supplying customers鈥� homes for the first time. The early 2000s was a time of growth; Ecotricity was powering more homes with green electricity and using its customers鈥� money to turn bills into mills.

In 2010, we launched green gas, making us the first energy company to offer a truly green dual fuel tariff and in 2013 we followed that up with 100% green electricity for all customers. By the end of 2014, Ecotricity was powering over 150,000 customers and providing the best customer service in the industry.

Ford Dagenham windmill

Climate campaigner

Dale has always been very active in Ecotricity but it hasn鈥檛 stopped him getting involved in other environment-related projects. His unwavering passion for the planet and commitment to making positive change in key areas of food, transport and energy have seen him pioneer the following projects:

  • Forest Green Rovers, the world鈥檚 first carbon neutral football club.

  • Ecotalk, the green mobile phone service, which uses money from customers鈥� bills to give land back to nature, creating vital new habitats for British wildlife.

  • Little Green Devils, a sustainable vegan food range for UK schools.

  • Ecobonds, a new way of funding green energy projects and sharing the benefits with customers.

  • The Nemesis, a record-breaking supercar powered by green electricity.

  • Electric Highway, the UK鈥檚 first motorway network of charging points for electric cars.

  • Sky Diamonds, ethical and environmentally friendly diamonds made by taking carbon from the atmosphere.

In the last couple of years, the climate has finally begun to top the political agenda, with Extinction Rebellion and Greta Thunberg bringing attention to a cause that Dale has always championed.


Awards and recognition

Over the past 20 years, Dale has been recognised for his work in creating a greener Britain. From getting an OBE in 2004 to winning the Ashden UK Award for work in the area of renewable energy in 2007, Dale has spoken at many global conventions for climate change over the years.

Dale is now a regular on television and radio, and has a large following on social media. He鈥檚 worked with the tabloid newspaper The Express this year to try and spread the message about fighting the climate crisis to a much wider audience. He also hosts a podcast called Zerocarbonista which discusses climate news, as well as ways in which we can all live more sustainably.

He's recently written his first book, Manifesto 鈥� part-memoir, part blueprint for the future of the planet. Dale explains how focusing on energy, transport and food can solve the climate crisis and change the way we live for the better in other ways, too.


Follow Dale

If you鈥檇 like to hear more from Dale, you can:

  • Follow him on or .

  • Listen to .

  • Buy a copy of or listen with a .




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Climate Clock

The Climate Clock is a version of the Doomsday clock that has been running since 1947 - this tracks the risk of global man-made disaster, through man made technology (like nuclear weapons) - displaying the minutes and seconds left before midnight, when disaster strikes. The climate crisis is a small part of the calculations made.The climate clock uses a similar approach, but, focuses only on the climate crisis - which is the biggest and most urgent existential threat we face."The Climate Clock is a countdown to the biggest man-made disaster we face - but also a measure by which we can track our progress - moving from fossil to renewable energy. It shows we have no time to lose - the clock is ticking鈥�" Dale Vince, OBE.